1. COVID-19 pandemic and STEMI: pathway activation and outcomes from the pan-London heart attack group
- Author
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Ritesh Kanyal, Tushar Kotecha, Iqbal S. Malik, Roby Rakhit, Ozan M. Demir, James C. Spratt, Brian Wang, Simon J. Wilson, Philip MacCarthy, Richard J. Jabbour, Sam Firoozi, Luciano Candilio, Miles Dalby, Michelle Connolly, Lucy Olivia Lawson, Asrar Ahmed, Callum Little, Divaka Perera, George Collins, and Ajay Jain
- Subjects
Male ,lcsh:Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Time Factors ,Databases, Factual ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ambulances ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Chest pain ,law.invention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient Admission ,law ,Risk Factors ,London ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Hospital Mortality ,Delivery of Health Care, Integrated ,Middle Aged ,Intensive care unit ,Interventional Cardiology ,3. Good health ,Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care ,Treatment Outcome ,myocardial infarction ,Cardiology ,Critical Pathways ,Female ,Patient Safety ,medicine.symptom ,Coronavirus Infections ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute coronary syndrome ,chest pain ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Context (language use) ,Risk Assessment ,Time-to-Treatment ,acute coronary syndrome ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Magazin ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,percutaneous coronary intervention ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,Thrombosis ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:RC666-701 ,Concomitant ,ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction ,business - Abstract
ObjectivesTo understand the impact of COVID-19 on delivery and outcomes of primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI). Furthermore, to compare clinical presentation and outcomes of patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) with active COVID-19 against those without COVID-19.MethodsWe systematically analysed 348 STEMI cases presenting to the PPCI programme in London during the peak of the pandemic (1 March to 30 April 2020) and compared with 440 cases from the same period in 2019. Outcomes of interest included ambulance response times, timeliness of revascularisation, angiographic and procedural characteristics, and in-hospital clinical outcomesResultsThere was a 21% reduction in STEMI admissions and longer ambulance response times (87 (62–118) min in 2020 vs 75 (57–95) min in 2019, pConclusionThese findings suggest that PPCI pathways can be maintained during unprecedented healthcare emergencies but confirms the high mortality of STEMI in the context of concomitant COVID-19 infection characterised by a heightened state of thrombogenicity.
- Published
- 2020